It isn't enough until we've rightly represented all scripture truth and revelation. "Out of" the Father in what sense?
I'm not sure what you're addressing here. Exerchomai in John 8:42 and ekporeuomai in John 15:26?
The processions were ex- and ek-, and are external. DyoHypo has them as internal processions. Neither is en-.
Is that what you were referring to?
Incarnation? Colossians 1 has no problem equivocating Genesis 1 & 2 as God. There is no 'out of' suggested there.
I'm still not sure what this is referencing unless it's exerchomai and ekporeuomai that I referenced.
Similarly, John 1:1 says both 'with' and 'was.'
Yes. For the Logos. You presume the Logos is an eternally-individuated "person".
And are you not even aware of your doctrine's INternal processions for the Logos and Pneuma? That's the likely culprit.
Such is certainly eternal. "Out of" carries a 'finite' concept of change.
God's essence is immutable. And you don't understand the distinction between eternal and everlasting. That's part of what I'm trying to illustrate. This is the first real "clog" in the flow of the convo. I know why it is, but I can't remedy it. It's largely because you're unaware of minutiae of your doctrine, and because you don't know what you don't know.
Aidios is eternal. It refers to no beginning or end.
Aionios is everlasting. It refers to no end.
Proskairos is temporal. It refers to a beginning and an end.
The incarnation is the only indication of such and unique.
We're not on the same page. You're unaware of your doctrine's treatment of the processions. Ex- and ek- aren't and can't be internal.
No, such is rather disclosure from God. The "Lord saying to my Lord" conveys degree of separation. Jesus cannot pray to the Father without a separation conveyed, and therefore undeniably true.
During the Incarnation. And there IS separation, but not as distinct eternal hypostases. You're riding the concept and inference. It's quite difficult to overcome.
There is a magnetic polarity involved in stressing both Tri- and -une that I very much appreciate. We can do a better job of it, and in that sense, I'm for clarity, but am yet concerned about your terms and rejection of modern trinitarians.
I don't "reject" anyone. I reject Triadism as O/rthodox Trinitarianism. It's not.
Firstly, scripture doesn't give us three hypostases. But multiple hypostases don't represent individuated centers of sentient consciousness. Multiple minds/wills is multiple souls. You've skipped over that and inferred multiple minds because the Incarnate Logos had one while as Theanthropos.
As you said, you are trying to replace triune belief, not augment or sharpen it.
Not really. I'm reconciling the errors to the truth. O/rtho Trinity is 95% correct. It's Triadism that has largely replaced actual Trinitarianism. That's what I reject. You just don't see it.
I cannot label it heresy until I see whether such damages one scriptural revelation or another, yet.
Sorry, but I'm not concerned whether heretical conceptual Triadists label me. I've been called everything there is to be called by ignorand and adamant indoctrinates of simplistic understanding that don't even understand their own doctrine.
I do no damage whatsoever. I unveil the central omission of ALL historical God-models and reconcile them. ALL of them.
Well, you are in good triune company on this one and I'm very careful to say I'm not. This verse expresses singular identity, as well as individualization.
Maybe set aside English and go look at the Hebrew.
"Name" is no cure-all separation. Name or description makes little difference in this text (notice 'little' not no difference at all).
Sure it does. The name is the mark or memorial or honor or authority OF the subject.
And you are correcting me from a standard triune position, I understand this. My point again is to say "the Father is not the Son, is not the Spirit," for me, isn't careful enough because it doesn't fit with Isaiah 9:6 well.
Okay. I was only addressing it because you mentioned it.
My initial statement would be "'No,' but with clarifiers."
Difficult to say. It, to me, is like God making a rock He cannot pick up. Why? Because theoretically He can build Himself something, like a dwelling but such would be infinite in properties to 'contain (horrible term for this) Him, and thus we are on about a chicken/egg consideration.
Yes.
Well, sin is a privation, so "no." Sin does exist, but is not a 'form' but saying 'privation' does mean some 'thing.'
Again, any concept/action proceeding from sin condition...
Yes.
No, but this says more about me being finite and limited, more than anything. We are not 'privvy.'
Same as above. For instance, I've no idea where angels dwell. They have 'access' to heaven.... Lot's of speculation here, I don't believe we are told definitively.
Again, not certain I am all inclusive in answers here. I'm not sure either of us can be. If you have verses that say so, chart 'em out but I no of no verses that would allow me to be definitive. I cannot be definitive where God has given me no right to be. I am, definitively finite and limited as to my created make-up.
Not a problem.
Well... since we seem to be at an impasse of communication in ways, I'll just put it out there.
God created eternity. The heavenly realm is created. This means the entire structure of Theology Proper has to be reformulated to maintain all the same apophatic and cataphatic sub-tenets and components for the "how", etc.
Depending upon how this goes, I'll provide some further references and exegesis. But for the first time, I sense you're balking out of cognitive dissonance.
The DyoHypostatic Trinity couldn't and didn't create ALL. It depicts a God who has His inherent existence IN a realm He created. And it thus means He's immanent and impotent.
God INhabited eternity. He did so when/as He created it. The processions of the Logos and the Pneuma were EXternal as He spoke and breathed forth creation, filling the heavenly realm with His Pneuma and the presence of His Logos that would ultimately become flesh as the Son.
God alone is UNcreated. Before He spoke, there was NO where, when, or what. He created it all, including the very framework for referencing its parameters. All things are upheld by the Rhema of His dunamis. (Heb. 1:3) And only His dunamis (power) and Theiotes (Divinity/Godhead - singular) are aidios (eternal). (Romans 1:20)
God alone is eternal (aidios). Those things that are everlasting (aionios) had an inception. A beginning.
In geometric terms, eternity is a ray rather than a line. The cosmos is a line segment. Only God is a line (and that which proceeded forth/proceedeth from Him).
Your God couldn't and didn't create the eternity of the heavenly realm. Instead, He is contained and constrained by it. It's a self-defeating paradox unto itself.
Psa 33:6 By the word of the LORD the heavens were made, and by the breath of his mouth all their host.
Figurative.
Seriously? So the Lord (YHWH) didn't literally create everything by His Word and the Breath of His mouth? The Hebrew corresponds to Rhema and Pneuma.
God indeed literally created according to scripture in Psalm 33:6.